Date: 2002/01/26 20:41
From: The Webfairy <webfairy@enteract.com>
To: cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com
Hitler's Germany encouraged Zionism.
http://www.aldeilis.net/zion/zionhol01.html
While Zionism as an option was taken by many young Jews, it remained a
minority position until the first days of the 3rd Reich. The Zionist
Federation of Germany (ZVFD), an organization representing a tiny
minority of German Jews, was selected by the Nazis as the body to
represent the Jews of the Reich. Its was the only flag of an
international organization allowed to fly in Berlin, and this was the
only international organization allowed to operate during this period.
(snip)
Immediately after the Nazi takeover in 1933, Jews all over the world
supported or were organizing a world wide boycott of German goods. This
campaign hurt the Nazi regime and the German authorities searched
frantically for a way disabling the boycott. It was clear that if Jews
and Jewish organizations were to pull out the campaign would collapse.
This problem was solved by the ZVfD.
http://www.aldeilis.net/zion/zionhol01.html
Zionists diffused the boycott which the Germans took so seriously they
considered it a "war."
http://www.aldeilis.net/zion/zionhol01.html
A second front was a matter of months away, as the western Allies
prepared their forces. In the midst of all this we find Eichmann, the
master bureaucrat of industrial murder, setting up his HQ in occupied
Budapest, after the German takeover of the country in April 1944.
His first act was to have a conference with the Jewish leadership, and
to appoint Zionist Federation members, headed by Kastner, as the agent
and clearing house for all Jews in their relationship with the SS and
Nazi authorities. Why they did this is not difficult to see. As opposed
to Poland, where its three and half million Jews lived in ghettoes and
were visible different from the rest of the Polish population, the
Hungarian Jews were in integrated part of the community. The middle
class was mainly Jewish, the Jews were mainly middle class. They enjoyed
freedom of travel, served in the Hungarian (fascist) army in frontline
units, as officers and soldiers, their names were Hungarian - how was
Eichmann to find them if they were to be exterminated?
The task was not easy, there were a million Jews in Hungary, most of
them resident, the rest being refugees from other countries. Many had
heard about the fate of Jews elsewhere, and were unlikely to believe any
statements by Nazi officials. Like elsewhere, the only people who had
the information and the ear of the frightened Jewish population were the
Judenrat. In this case the Judenrat comprised mainly the Zionist
Federation members. Without their help the SS, with 19 officers and less
than 90 men, plus a few hundred Hungarian police, could not have
collected and controlled a million Jews, when they did not even know
their whereabouts.
http://www.aldeilis.net/zion/zionhol01.html
http://www.washington-report.org/backissues/0897/9708018.html
What I suggest is that the Balfour Declaration was a reward to the
Zionists for their part in having brought the United States into the
First World War at Britain's side.
The Balfour Declaration and the Zimmermann Note
http://www.washington-report.org/backissues/0897/9708018.html
--
Patriotism means you care enough about your country to fight for
justice.
http://emperors-clothes.com
-- Jared Israel